Home & Property · Statewide
Test a Private Well Before You Rely on It
Private-well buyers should treat water testing as part of the property check, not as an afterthought.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026
A home with a private well needs a water check before a buyer treats the supply as settled. The tap may run clear during a showing, but clear water is not the same as a lab result.
NYS Health warns that germs and chemicals can enter private drinking water through runoff, extreme weather, and natural groundwater changes. Testing is the way to know whether drinking water remains suitable for household use. For a purchase, ask what tests were done, when they were done, which lab handled them, and whether the results match local health-department guidance.
If a seller provides older tests, use them as history, then decide whether fresh testing belongs in the inspection window.
Handled early, this is more like a household paper-trail check than a warning sign.
Private wells are common in rural and edge-of-town New York, so the question does not have to feel strange. Keep New York State Department of Health guidance, the NYS Health testing note, the lab report, test date, address, and county health-department notes together so the well question does not get lost behind the inspection, title, and mortgage paperwork.